Peoples Democracy newsletter

Peoples Democracy newsletter categories.

CITU Welcomes Minimum Pension Increase

THE Centre of Indian Trade Unions has welcomed the reported decision of the government of India for increasing the minimum pension to Rs 1,000 per month for the pensioners under the Employees Pension Scheme and EPFO, as carried by the press.

The CITU press statement issued in this connection from New Delhi, on January 24, 2014, noted that this demand of increasing the minimum pension was one of the ten-point demands on which all the central trade unions and national federations have been conducting countrywide agitations and strikes since 2009.

Mid-Day Meal Workers Organise Militant Demonstration

THOUSANDS of mid-day meal workers coming from the districts of Saharsa, Supaul and Madhepura staged a militant demonstration in front of the Commissioner’s Office on January 24, 2014. The demonstration was held under the banner of Mid-day Meal Workers’ Union and led by its Pramandaliya Sanrakshak, Vinod Kumar. CITU state secretary, Ganesh Singh, Dr Chandrabhash, Ganesh Manav, Vyas Prasad Yadav, Manju Devi and other leaders addressed the demonstrators.

BEFI Holds 13th State Conference

THE Bank Employees Federation of India (BEFI) recently organised at Kolkata its two-day 13th West Bengal state conference, which got off to a flying start on Saturday, January 18, 2014, with a big colourful procession of bank employees, numbering about 2,000. The procession started from outside the Bengal Chambers of Commerce building in BBD Bag area in Kolkata and headed towards the Mahajati Sadan, the venue of the conference, thus covering a stretch of about two km through the main thoroughfares going towards the northern part of the city.

South Sudan: Descending into a Civil War

BARELY two and a half years after South Sudan joined the community of independent nations, the bloody sceptre of a civil war has once again cast its shadow. The latest cycle of violence erupted on December 15. According to reports, the trouble started when a clash took place between two sections of the presidential security guards. The fighting was said to be on ethnic lines, with the Dinka clashing against the Nuer. The Dinkas constitute around 15 per cent of the population and the Nuer around 10 per cent.

AIKS Deplores FDI in Farmland

THROUGH a statement issued from New Delhi on January 23, 2014, the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) gave expression to its deep fury and protested against the move of the UPA government to open up the sale or acquisition of agricultural land to foreign direct investment (FDI). The AIKS said it would resist this treacherous move against the sovereign interests of the nation and its people tooth and nail, by joining hands with all progressive and democratic sections of the people. The Congress led Manmohan Singh government is all set to allow foreign corporates and realtors to put the country for

Anganwadi Workers on Indefinite Strike in Maharashtra

THE All India Federation of Anganwadi Workers and Helpers has, in a statement issued on January 25, congratulated the nearly two lakh anganwadi workers and helpers in Maharashtra for their successful indefinite strike. It has demanded that the chief minister of Maharashtra should urgently intervene and settle the issue.
 
The anganwadi workers and helpers of Maharashtra are on an indefinite strike from January 6, 2014 demanding an increase in wages and implementation of the pension scheme which was declared as early as in 2005.

Hindutva Reinvented in Namo’s Rainbow of Deceit

RIGHTWING social forces have once again revealed their influence in the wake of the declining social reform role of the neo-liberal state. Incidents of the last few weeks have shown up the underbelly of neo-liberal corporate capitalism and the challenge of governance associated with it. In the first instance was the vigilante action undertaken by a responsible minister of Delhi to show his accountability to the people. In the process he revealed not only his own social conservatism but also the conservatism of the ‘masses’ who can rule the country.

Pete Seeger

THE Communist Party of India (Marxist) mourns the demise of Pete Seeger, a singer, folk-song collector and songwriter who spearheaded an American folk revival and spent a long career championing folk music, who died on January 27. He was a simple man, who prided in calling himself as a “communist with a small 'c'”.
Pete Seeger was born on May 3, 1919 and was 94 at his death. He performed and recorded for six decades, and was still an activist: as recently as October 2011, he marched in New York City as part of the Occupy Wall Street protests.

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Peoples Democracy newsletter